NZeLearning is home for me, Jason Ranston, Leader of Interactive Technologies at Ko Awatea. All thoughts and opinions are my own. Jason is using Pinterest, an online pinboard to collect and share what inspires you.
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Scooped by Professor Jill Jameson onto Leadership, Trust and e-Learning |
NZeLearning is home for me, Jason Ranston, Leader of Interactive Technologies at Ko Awatea. All thoughts and opinions are my own. Jason is using Pinterest, an online pinboard to collect and share what inspires you.
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After creating content -- whether it's a blog post, an ebook, a webinar, or a video -- it's important to promote that content through social media channels.
And when you do promote that content in social media, you cross your fingers that it generates a ton of shares, tweets, and interaction. For the sake of Twitter, if you follow a few simple best practices, more people are likely to retweet and spread the distribution of your content, giving it a much broader reach and a better opportunity to get found by a new audience of prospective customers beyond your direct followers. Marketers should know how to retweet the right way, but it's also critical for them to learn how to get others to retweet their content, too.
11 Tips for Getting People to Retweet Your Content... Via Martin Gysler
Martin Gysler's comment,
December 20, 2011 10:43 AM
Thanks Tom, I'm glad that you like it :-). Have you seen the new post I published on Billboards?
Tom George's comment,
December 20, 2011 3:12 PM
Hey Martin,
Hey the new post was great and I was happy to share it. Thanks. I have some new updates on the site you might like.
Martin Gysler's comment,
December 20, 2011 3:50 PM
Hey Tom, Cool, I'm glad! OK, I'll take a look tomorrow, today it's a bit late 10PM and I have not finish my work from today... Cheers!
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I created and then abandoned a Twitter account many months ago. I had virtually zero reputation outside of Twitter when I started. And it wasn’t an account that became popular by following everyone back or using other tricks. On the abandoned account, all tweets were removed except one, which said:
Do not follow this account, follow this other account instead.
However, nearly 100,000 people followed the old account in the coming months (though many figured out their error eventually, and switched to the new one). That’s the power of a leader’s reputation in social media. Reputation can bring people to you even after you have left... Via Martin Gysler Delete the scoop?
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